Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina

Abstract Background G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of transmembrane receptors in fungi, where they play important roles in signal transduction. Among them, the Pth11-related GPCRs form a large and divergent protein family, and are only found in fungi in Pezizomycotina. Ho...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xihui Xu, Guopeng Li, Lu Li, Zhenzhu Su, Chen Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-07-01
Series:BMC Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-1076-5
id doaj-ff199a5680a44e54b707dd68dba55a26
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ff199a5680a44e54b707dd68dba55a262020-11-24T20:56:09ZengBMCBMC Microbiology1471-21802017-07-0117111110.1186/s12866-017-1076-5Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to PezizomycotinaXihui Xu0Guopeng Li1Lu Li2Zhenzhu Su3Chen Chen4College of Life Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural UniversityAgricultural Product Processing Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural SciencesCollege of Life Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural UniversityState Key Laboratory of Rice Biology, Institute of Biotechnology, Zhejiang UniversityCollege of Life Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural UniversityAbstract Background G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of transmembrane receptors in fungi, where they play important roles in signal transduction. Among them, the Pth11-related GPCRs form a large and divergent protein family, and are only found in fungi in Pezizomycotina. However, the evolutionary process and potential functions of Pth11-related GPCRs remain largely unknown. Results Twenty genomes of fungi in Pezizomycotina covering different nutritional strategies were mined for putative Pth11-related GPCRs. Phytopathogens encode much more putative Pth11-related GPCRs than symbionts, saprophytes, or entomopathogens. Based on the phylogenetic tree, these GPCRs can be divided into nine clades, with each clade containing fungi in different taxonomic orders. Instead of fungi from the same order, those fungi with similar nutritional strategies were inclined to share orthologs of putative Pth11-related GPCRs. Most of the CFEM domain-containing Pth11-related GPCRs, which were only included in two clades, were detected in phytopathogens. Furthermore, many putative Pth11-related GPCR genes of phytopathogens were upregulated during invasive plant infection, but downregulated under biotic stress. The expressions of putative Pth11-related GPCR genes of saprophytes and entomopathogens could be affected by nutrient conditions, especially the carbon source. The gene expressions revealed that Pth11-related GPCRs could respond to biotic/abiotic stress and invasive plant infection with different expression patterns. Conclusion Our results indicated that the Pth11-related GPCRs existed before the diversification of Pezizomycotina and have been gained and/or lost several times during the evolutionary process. Tandem duplications and trophic variations have been important factors in this evolution.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-1076-5FungiG-protein coupled receptorsGene family evolutionGene expression patternPezizomycotinaPhytopathogens
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xihui Xu
Guopeng Li
Lu Li
Zhenzhu Su
Chen Chen
spellingShingle Xihui Xu
Guopeng Li
Lu Li
Zhenzhu Su
Chen Chen
Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
BMC Microbiology
Fungi
G-protein coupled receptors
Gene family evolution
Gene expression pattern
Pezizomycotina
Phytopathogens
author_facet Xihui Xu
Guopeng Li
Lu Li
Zhenzhu Su
Chen Chen
author_sort Xihui Xu
title Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
title_short Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
title_full Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
title_fullStr Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
title_full_unstemmed Genome-wide comparative analysis of putative Pth11-related G protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to Pezizomycotina
title_sort genome-wide comparative analysis of putative pth11-related g protein-coupled receptors in fungi belonging to pezizomycotina
publisher BMC
series BMC Microbiology
issn 1471-2180
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Background G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of transmembrane receptors in fungi, where they play important roles in signal transduction. Among them, the Pth11-related GPCRs form a large and divergent protein family, and are only found in fungi in Pezizomycotina. However, the evolutionary process and potential functions of Pth11-related GPCRs remain largely unknown. Results Twenty genomes of fungi in Pezizomycotina covering different nutritional strategies were mined for putative Pth11-related GPCRs. Phytopathogens encode much more putative Pth11-related GPCRs than symbionts, saprophytes, or entomopathogens. Based on the phylogenetic tree, these GPCRs can be divided into nine clades, with each clade containing fungi in different taxonomic orders. Instead of fungi from the same order, those fungi with similar nutritional strategies were inclined to share orthologs of putative Pth11-related GPCRs. Most of the CFEM domain-containing Pth11-related GPCRs, which were only included in two clades, were detected in phytopathogens. Furthermore, many putative Pth11-related GPCR genes of phytopathogens were upregulated during invasive plant infection, but downregulated under biotic stress. The expressions of putative Pth11-related GPCR genes of saprophytes and entomopathogens could be affected by nutrient conditions, especially the carbon source. The gene expressions revealed that Pth11-related GPCRs could respond to biotic/abiotic stress and invasive plant infection with different expression patterns. Conclusion Our results indicated that the Pth11-related GPCRs existed before the diversification of Pezizomycotina and have been gained and/or lost several times during the evolutionary process. Tandem duplications and trophic variations have been important factors in this evolution.
topic Fungi
G-protein coupled receptors
Gene family evolution
Gene expression pattern
Pezizomycotina
Phytopathogens
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12866-017-1076-5
work_keys_str_mv AT xihuixu genomewidecomparativeanalysisofputativepth11relatedgproteincoupledreceptorsinfungibelongingtopezizomycotina
AT guopengli genomewidecomparativeanalysisofputativepth11relatedgproteincoupledreceptorsinfungibelongingtopezizomycotina
AT luli genomewidecomparativeanalysisofputativepth11relatedgproteincoupledreceptorsinfungibelongingtopezizomycotina
AT zhenzhusu genomewidecomparativeanalysisofputativepth11relatedgproteincoupledreceptorsinfungibelongingtopezizomycotina
AT chenchen genomewidecomparativeanalysisofputativepth11relatedgproteincoupledreceptorsinfungibelongingtopezizomycotina
_version_ 1716790592354123776